"I hold in my hand a Swedish school book used during the 1980s. It makes no mention at all of the destiny of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania after the Second World War. Not one word," Reinfeldt said.

"In fact, it is hard to find any reference to the fact that there had ever been any Baltic countries. This was the reality when I went to school," the 46-year-old leader said.

"Sweden has a debt of honour to the people of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. We owe it to ourselves -- and we owe it to the Baltic peoples -- to remember the past, but also to build a common future," he added.

Latvia's Valdis Dombrovskis, Lithuania's Andrius Kubilius and Estonia's Andrus Ansip thanked Sweden for the assistance it has given their states since independence.

The ceremony was held at a Stockholm square where dozens of meetings known as the "Monday meetings" were held in 1990 and 1991 to support the Baltics' efforts to regain independence.

The three states organised a human chain in 1989 in which two million people joined hands, linking the Baltic capitals, against Soviet rule.

The landmark protest started a sequence that eventually led to the three nations' independence by 1991.